A General History And Collection Of Voyages And Travels - Volume 2 - By Robert Kerr


















































































































 -  Before the establishment of
this trade at Arguin, the Portuguese used to send every year four or more
caravels to - Page 322
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Before The Establishment Of This Trade At Arguin, The Portuguese Used To Send Every Year Four Or More Caravels To The Bay Of Arguin, The Crews Of Which, Landing Well Armed In The Night, Were In Use To Surprise Some Of The Fishing Villages, And Carry Off The Inhabitants Into Slavery.

They even penetrated sometimes a considerable way into the interior, and carried off the Arabs of both sexes, whom they sold as slaves in Portugal.

Leaving Arguin we sailed along the coast to the river Senegal[4], which is very large, and divides the people called Azanaghi, or Azanhaji, from the first kingdom of the Negroes. The Azanhaji are of a tawny colour, or rather of a deep brown complexion, and inhabit some parts of the coast beyond Cape Branco, ranging through the deserts, and their district reaches to the confines of the Arabs of Hoden. They live on dates, barley, and the milk of camels; but as they border likewise on the country of the Negroes, they carry on trade with these people, from whom they procure millet and pulse, particularly beans. Owing to the scarcity of provisions in the desert, the Azanhaji are but spare eaters, and are able to endure hunger with wonderful patience, as a poringer of barley-meal made into hasty-pudding will serve them a whole day. The Portuguese used to carry away many of these people for slaves, as they were preferred to the negroes; but for some time past this has been prohibited by Don Henry, and peace and trade has been established with them, as he is in hopes they may be easily brought over to the catholic faith by intercourse with the Christians, more especially as they are not hitherto thoroughly established in the superstitions of Mahomet, of which they know nothing but by hearsay.

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